Thanks, Erich, for your thoughtful questions about the logistics of very large meetings.
In the largest OS I have participated in, 700 or 800, I remember that it was very hard to get close enough to the wall to find out what sessions I wanted to attend. Some good sessions were posted but not attended even by people who had intended to come, because they could not find the information or the meeting place. And I can also see that some of the other structures need further thought and design attention. On the other hand, just being present in such a meeting really stretches people's thinking about the possibility of doing things they could not have predicted. So I think that the positive outcomes are a bit different than a meeting which focusses on the issues of a smaller organization, in more specific ways. I struggled with the question of flip charts for a very small OS I facilitated, decided not to use them because of the strange configuration of the rooms. It worked out all right, though I missed the ability to make the discussion visible to all participants. Each group did a great job of summarizing their discussion on a handwritten report form. Joelle * * ========================================================== [email protected] ------------------------------ To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of [email protected], Visit: http://listserv.boisestate.edu/archives/oslist.html
